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Wakefield Shuts Down Phillies In Red Sox Win

Boston's Kevin Youkilis scores on a ground out by J.D. Drew during the second inning of in an interleague baseball game with Philadelphia on Sunday in Philadelphia. (AP)
Boston's Kevin Youkilis scores on a ground out by J.D. Drew during the second inning of in an interleague baseball game with Philadelphia on Sunday in Philadelphia. (AP)

Tim Wakefield's fluttering knuckleball had the Phillies flustered.

The 43-year-old Wakefield pitched eight shutout innings for his first victory in nearly a year, and the Boston Red Sox roughed up Roy Halladay in an 8-3 win over Philadelphia on Sunday.

Kevin Youkilis tripled, homered and scored three runs for Boston.

Wakefield's knuckleball, which was clocked in the mid 60s, clearly confused the Phillies. He allowed five hits and two walks in earning his first win since July 8, 2009, against Oakland. Wakefield (1-2) also earned his 190th career victory as the Red Sox took two of three from the Phillies.

"I had a pretty good feel with everything and our offense did a good job," Wakefield said.

The win for Wakefield was his first in 13 appearances - nine starts - since his last victory.

Getting an early lead against a hot-hitting team boosted his confidence.

"It helped a lot," Wakefield said. "I was able to throw my pitches and get outs. I didn't have to worry about walks."

Ramon Ramirez allowed three runs in the ninth - Raul Ibanez's RBI double and pinch-hitter Ross Gload later connected on a two-run homer.

Youkilis had a triple to open the second and a towering homer to left in the sixth off Halladay, giving the Red Sox a 4-0 lead. Youkilis is 21 for 58 in his career against Halladay.

"He's a good hitter who doesn't give at-bats away," Red Sox manager Terry Francona. "He's been terrific."

Halladay (6-3) was hit hard a start after he didn't appear to have his best stuff in a 132-pitch complete game effort against Pittsburgh on Tuesday, a 2-1 loss. On Sunday, Halladay, who has a major league-leading four complete games, saw his ERA jump from 1.64 to 2.22 after allowing eight hits and seven runs six earned in 5 2-3 innings.

"I felt good," Halladay said. "A of couple things didn't go the way I wanted to early."

Halladay got what appeared to be a perfect inning-ending double play ball in the fourth, but Adrian Beltre's soft grounder went straight through third baseman Greg Dobbs' legs, allowing two runs to score for a 3-0 advantage.

"His game was better than what it indicated," Philadelphia manager Charlie Manuel. "I felt like his stuff was good. He can pitch better. At the same time, his stuff was good."

Youkilis led off the second with a triple to deep center field, which bounced out of Shane Victorino's glove as he jumped for the ball. J.D. Drew followed with an RBI grounder to first, scoring Youkilis for a 1-0 lead.

This program aired on May 24, 2010. The audio for this program is not available.

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